This is topic Underground cinema in catacombs under Paris in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by plaid (Member # 2393) on :
 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/france/story/0,11882,1299448,00.html

quote:
Police in Paris have discovered a fully equipped cinema-cum-restaurant in a large and previously uncharted cavern underneath the capital's chic 16th arrondissement.

Officers admit they are at a loss to know who built or used one of Paris's most intriguing recent discoveries.

"We have no idea whatsoever," a police spokesman said.

...

Further along, the tunnel opened into a vast 400 sq metre cave some 18m underground, "like an underground amphitheatre, with terraces cut into the rock and chairs".

There the police found a full-sized cinema screen, projection equipment, and tapes of a wide variety of films, including 1950s film noir classics and more recent thrillers. None of the films were banned or even offensive, the spokesman said.

A smaller cave next door had been turned into an informal restaurant and bar. "There were bottles of whisky and other spirits behind a bar, tables and chairs, a pressure-cooker for making couscous," the spokesman said.

"The whole thing ran off a professionally installed electricity system and there were at least three phone lines down there."

Three days later, when the police returned accompanied by experts from the French electricity board to see where the power was coming from, the phone and electricity lines had been cut and a note was lying in the middle of the floor: "Do not," it said, "try to find us."

Another article, with info about the group behind it:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/france/story/0,11882,1302249,00.html

quote:
There are, at most, 15 of them. Their ages range from 19 to 42, their professions from nurse to window dresser, mason to film director. And in a cave beneath the streets of Paris, they built a subterranean cinema whose discovery this week sent the city's police into a frenzy.

"They freaked out completely," Lazar, their spokesman, said happily. "They called in the bomb squad, the sniffer dogs, army security, the anti-terrorist squad, the serious crimes unit. They said it was skinheads or subversives. They got it on to national TV news. They hadn't a clue."

To be fair, until recently very few people did have a clue about La Mexicaine de la Perforation, a clandestine cell of "urban explorers" which claims its mission is to "reclaim and transform disused city spaces for the creation of zones of expression for free and independent art".

...

The cinema, with restaurant and bar annexe, was open for a seven-week season this summer, showing a suitably subversive programme which included works by Chinese and Korean directors but also Alex Proyas' Dark City, Coppola's Rumble Fish, David Lynch's Eraserhead, and Terry Gilliam's Brazil.

...

The Chaillot underground cinema is now definitively closed, even to a drill-toting and determined urban explorer. But even if the Paris police may have reluctantly (and with considerable embarrassment) decided its builders were neither terrorists, neo-Nazis nor satanists, they would very much like to charge them with some offence.

"As far as we know, they've been reduced to going for theft of electricity," said Lazar. "However, we covered our tracks so well that the electricity board has apparently told them that short of digging up every cable in the district there's no way of knowing where we took it from. But they're not happy. They've seen a tiny fraction of what we do, and it's a big deal for them."

There were, he added, maybe 10 other groups in Paris, all of a roughly similar size, involved in similarly creative, if murky, projects beneath the streets of the capital. "They will never stop it, they are too uncoordinated," he added.

News like this makes me very happy and impressed with the creativity of the human race [Smile]

[ September 13, 2004, 12:59 AM: Message edited by: plaid ]
 
Posted by Chaeron (Member # 744) on :
 
I heard about this too. I thought that what they did was absolutely magnificent. And their choice of movies was also brilliant. Dark City and Brazil?! What better movies to watch in the Catacombs.
 
Posted by Sara Sasse (Member # 6804) on :
 
quote:
"Urban explorers are the only people who, between us, know it all. We move between each network. We know where they link up - often, it's us who made the link. The authorities, the police, town hall, they don't know a hundredth, a thousandth, of what's down there."
Whoa. What a sci-fi world.

quote:
Building a fully functioning subterranean cinema was, the LMDP admits, a more than usually stiff challenge. The project took some 18 months to complete, though most of the hard work - including shifting a large pile of rubble off the terraces, and shoring up a couple of walls - was done in three or four weekends.

With their long experience of such matters, the group's technicians had little difficulty piping in electricity and phone lines.

"The biggest hassle was that everything - tables, chairs, bar, projector, screen, the lot - had to fit through a 30cm by 40cm hole on the surface," Lazar said. "When the police finally worked out where we were getting in, they couldn't believe it was the right place. It was so small."

Renegade electricians! Very Brazil.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
This is what I want to do with my life.
 
Posted by Annie (Member # 295) on :
 
Completement chouette!
 
Posted by Strider (Member # 1807) on :
 
that's awesome.
 
Posted by Goody Scrivener (Member # 6742) on :
 
Gee, and my first thought was the Theatre de Vampires LOL

Goody
 
Posted by Storm Saxon (Member # 3101) on :
 
I love yippies. [Smile]
 
Posted by Phanto (Member # 5897) on :
 
One day, if I lose all hope, I'll find something like that and devote all my life to it...

An interesting diversion from the crazyiness of life...
 
Posted by J T Stryker (Member # 6300) on :
 
The best place to start is the local public libray, they have alot of old maps around there. Not that I've considered doing something like that before... [Monkeys]

Stryker

[ September 13, 2004, 11:19 PM: Message edited by: J T Stryker ]
 
Posted by Icarus (Member # 3162) on :
 
That's so awesome! [Big Grin]

Too bad Lazar seems like such a smug, arrogant so-and-so.
 


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